Extensional and intensional definitions: Difference between revisions

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==Intensional definition==
{{also|Intension}}
In [[logic]] and [[mathematics]], an '''intensional definition''' gives the [[Meaning (linguistic)|meaning]] of a term by specifying [[Necessity and sufficiency|necessary and sufficient conditions]] for when the term should be used. In the case of [[nouns]], this is equivalent to specifying the [[Property (philosophy)|properties]] that an [[Object (philosophy)|object]] needs to have in order to be counted as a [[referent]] of the term.
 
For example, an intensional definition of the word "bachelor" is "unmarried man". This definition is valid because being an unmarried man is both a necessary condition and a sufficient condition for being a bachelor: it is necessary because one cannot be a bachelor without being an unmarried man, and it is sufficient because any unmarried man is a bachelor.<ref name="Cook">Cook, Roy T. "Intensional Definition". In ''A Dictionary of Philosophical Logic''. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2009. 155.</ref>